I just got a perfect result from your image set. What I did was the
following:
1. Have Hugin generate the remapped images, let's assume those are
located in folder1;
2. Find the images containing a full ring (3 of them in your image
set) and move them to another folder, folder2;
3. For each of the ring images, open the image in Gimp and use the
eraser to create a gap in the ring contour;
4. Call Enblend from the command line. Assuming your current folder is
just above folder1 and folder2 and Enblend is in the path, this is the
command line I've used (Windows style, Linux and MacOS users should
use forward slashes instead of backward slashes):
enblend -o test.jpg folder1\*.tif folder2\*.tif
This will make sure that the ring images (which are no longer rings)
will be included last. This is necessary, otherwise Enblend will fail
to generate a complete image, giving a number of messages like this:
Loading next image: test-20000054.tif
enblend: some images are redundant and will not be blended.
Changing the order of inclusion without modifying the ring images will
fail likewise, although with a slightly different output.
(by the way, I've rendered the pano at 2000x2000 for speed reasons,
but I assume outputting at full resolution will generate an equivalent
result)
Best,
Bart
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